The Dictionary of Human Geography

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that dominated geographical journals and
more evocative modes of expressing places
and landscapes. En route, geography’s connec-
tions with thehumanitiesspiralled far beyond
history, to includearthistory, dance,film
studies, the literary disciplines,music and
performancestudies. These were more than
exercises in critical interrogation ordecon-
struction; they also involved creative experi-
ments in writing (see, e.g., Harrison, Pile and
Thrift, 2004; Pred, 2004) and collaborations
with artists, curators, film-makers and per-
formance artists.


(2) These close encounters with the sciences,
social sciences and humanities have ensured
that there is no singleparadigmor method of
enquiry in geography. In order to elucidate the
multiple waysin which space is involved in the
conduct of life on Earth and in the transform-
ation of its surface, geographers have been
drawn into many different conversations:
human geographers with anthropologists, art
historians, economists, historians, literary
scholars, psychologists, sociologists and others;
physical geographers with atmospheric scien-
tists, botanists, biologists, ecologists, geologists,
soil scientists, zoologists and others. These
conversations have varied through time, and
the history of geography (seehistory of geog-
raphy) is an important part of understanding
how the contemporary field of geographical
enquiry has come to be the way it is, marking
both its ruptures from as well as its continuities
with any presumptive ‘geographical tradition’
(Livingstone, 1992). These conversations have
also varied over space, so that there is a ‘geog-
raphy of Geography’ too. The same claims can
be made about any discipline, but in geography
they have been increasingly interconnected.
Most recent studies of the history of geography
have recognized the importance of the spaces in
which geographical knowledge is produced and
through which it circulates. This has involved
attempts both tocontextualizegeography – to
understand the development of geographical
ideas in relation to the places and situations
from which they have emerged and the predica-
ments to which they were responding – and to
de-territorializegeography: to open the disciplin-
ary ring-fence, to appreciate that geography is
not limited to the academy and to interrogate
the production of geographical knowledges at
multiple sites (Harvey, 2004a).
These studies have produced a heightened
sensitivity to the specificity and partiality of
Euro-American and, still more particularly,
Anglo-American geography. Contracting geo-


graphy’s long and global history, Stoddart
(1985) proclaimed that modern geography
was a distinctivelyEuropean sciencethat could
be traced back to a series of decisive advances
in the closing decades of the eighteenth
century. It was then, so Stoddart argued, that
‘truth’ was made the central criterion of
objective science through the systematic
deployment of observation, classification and
comparison, and in his view it was the exten-
sion of these methods from the study of
natureto the study of human societies ‘that
made our subject possible’. But the critique of
the assumptions that underwrote such a claim,
sharpened by the rise ofpost-colonialism,
prompted many commentators to re-situate
that project as a profoundly Eurocentric and,
more recently, Euro-American science (see
eurocentrism: Gregory, 1994). Geography
has thus come to be seen as asituated know-
ledge that, of necessity, must enter into
conversations with scholars and others who
occupy quite different positions.
This is not only (or even primarily) a matter
of interdisciplinary dialogue; it also implies
inter-locational dialogue. The more restricted
idea of an Anglo-American geography was
largely a creature of the 1960s and 1970s
when, at the height of thequantitative revo-
lution, it seemed that a unified and coherent
model-based geography was emerging on
both sides of the Atlantic. ‘theory’, too,
seemed to offer a universal language that held
out the promise of a unified, even unitary
discipline. The subsequent critique ofspatial
scienceopened up many other paths for geog-
rapherstoexplore,and in that sense promoted
diversification, but in human geography in
particular it also heralded divergence as it
prised apart the commonalities that once
held the Anglo-American corpus together (cf.
Johnston and Sidaway, 2004). This coherence
(or rigidity, depending on your point of view)
has also been assailed by a growing concern
about the grids of power and privilege that
structure the international academy, and in
particular the silences and limitations of a nar-
rowly English-language geography. If, as Witt-
genstein observed, ‘the limits of my language
mean the limits of my world’, then a geog-
raphy that privileges one language is not only
limited: it is also dangerous (Hassink, 2007).
This poses an obvious difficulty for dictionar-
ies of geography such as this one (cf. Brunotte,
Gebhardt, Meurer, Meusburger and Nipper,
2002; Levy and Lussault, 2003).
That said, Anglophone geographers have
not been wholly indifferent to work in other

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